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- Title
Evolutionary history of mycorrhizal associations between Japanese Oxygyne (Thismiaceae) species and Glomeraceae fungi.
- Authors
Suetsugu, Kenji; Okada, Hidehito; Hirota, Shun K.; Suyama, Yoshihisa
- Abstract
Keywords: arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi; Glomeromycotina; host-shift speciation; interaction networks; metabarcoding; mycoheterotrophy; phylogenetic signal; specialization EN arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi Glomeromycotina host-shift speciation interaction networks metabarcoding mycoheterotrophy phylogenetic signal specialization 836 841 6 07/04/22 20220801 NES 220801 Acknowledgements We thank Hiroaki Yamashita, Takaomi Sugimoto, and Syozi Hyodo for their fieldwork assistance and Makoto Taniguchi, Takako Shizuka, and Michiko Ishida for their technical assistance. S7 Associations between mycoheterotrophic plant species and VTXs.Methods S1 Methods used to investigate phylogenetic signals between three Oxygyne species and their mycorrhizal communities. Mycorrhizal symbiosis occurs most commonly between plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMFs), and I c i . 80% of land plant species establish mycorrhizas with members of Glomeromycotina (Wang & Qiu, 2006; Smith & Read, 2008; Spatafora I et al i ., 2016). Mycorrhizas constitute diffuse symbioses in which individual plants associate with multiple fungi simultaneously, and individual fungi associate with multiple plants simultaneously (Smith & Read, 2008; van der Heijden I et al i ., 2015).
- Subjects
ORCHIDS; FUNGAL communities; POLLINATION; SPECIES; MICROSATELLITE repeats; DNA data banks; ECOPHYSIOLOGY
- Publication
New Phytologist, 2022, Vol 235, Issue 3, p836
- ISSN
0028-646X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/nph.18163